remand

listen to the pronunciation of remand
English - English
To send a case back to a lower court for further consideration
The act of an appellate court sending a matter back to a lower court for review or disposal
To send a prisoner back to custody.A modern legal definition includes the possibility of bail being granted, so in the United Kingdom at least, this does not necessarily imply custody: "." www.opsi.gov.uk. URL accessed on 2010-04-02
The act of sending an accused person back into custody whilst awaiting trial
{v} to send, command or call, back
To return a prisoner to custody until proceedings are resumed or the matter is set for further action
1 To return a case to a lower court or other agency 2 To return a person to custody
Held in custody until next court appearance
  an order made by an appellate court whose decision that does not end the case The case is sent back (remanded) to the trial court to do whatever is necessary to be consistent with the appeals court's decision   This may mean conducting a new trial, entering judgment for a different party, holding a hearing on a part of the case, etc  
Remand is used to refer to the process of remanding someone in custody or on bail, or to the period of time until their trial begins. The remand hearing is often over in three minutes. the period of time that someone spends in prison before their trial on remand
When an appellate court sends a case back to a lower court for further proceedings
To send a prisoner back to custody
To send a dispute back to the court where it was originally heard Usually it is an appellate court that remands a case for proceedings in the trial court consistent with the appellate court's ruling
To recommit; to send back
The legal term for returning the accused to custody to await further action
The act of remanding; the order for recommitment
When an appellate body sends a case back to a lower body for further proceedings
To send back
(verb) 1 To send a case back to the court, tribunal or other such body from which the case has been appealed or moved 2 To send (a prisoner or accused person) back into custody, as to await trial or further investigation (noun) Such a sending back Example: When a judgment is appealed to higher court and subsequently reversed, the higher court usually remands (sends back) the case for a new trial to be carried out consistent with the conditions and principles (i e that certain evendence be excluded from the new trial) announced in the higher court's opinion
the act of sending an accused person back into custody to await trial (or the continuation of the trial)
refer (a matter or legal case) to another committe or authority or court for decision
Usually used in appellate courts whereby the appellate court refers the case back to the original court for further action
To send back A disposition by an appellate court that results in sending the case back to the original court from which it came for further proceedings
To send a case to a lower court to determine the best way of implementing the higher court's decision
To send back The act of an appeallate court when it sends a case back to the trial court and orders the trial court to conduct limited new hearings or an entirely new trial, or to take some further action When a prisoner is brought before a judge on habeas corpus, for the purpose of obtaining liberty, the judge hears the case, and either discharges him or remands him
{i} act of sending back, act of remitting; act of sending back into custody pending further legal action; state of being remitted, state of being sent back
"To send back"; For example, an appellate court may remand a case to a lower court for retrial or for some change in disposition
The period of time before a criminal charge is finally dealt with by the court •Criminal Courts
To send back (usually to a lower court)
(n) a disposition by an appellate court that results in sending the case back to the where it was tried so that some action (v) to send back
If a person who is accused of a crime is remanded in custody or on bail, they are told to return to the court at a later date, when their trial will take place. Carter was remanded in custody for seven days
lock up or confine, in or as in a jail; "The suspects were imprisoned without trial"; "the murderer was incarcerated for the rest of his life"
To send back In the even of a decision being remanded, it is sent back by a higher Court to the Court from which it came for further action
Usually used in appellate courts whereby the appellate court refers the case back to the original court for further action (LE)
{f} send back, remit; hold in custody pending further legal action
remand a suspect
keep a suspect in jail
remand centre
In Britain, a remand centre is an institution where people who are accused of a crime are sent until their trial begins or until a decision about their punishment has been made. a place like a prison where people are kept while waiting for a trial
remand hearing
hearing at the end of a legal proceeding
remand home
a place like a prison where young people are kept while waiting for a trial
remand in custody
extension of imprisonment
remand until the trial ends
in custody until the end of the trial, in jail until the end of the legal proceedings
A remand
remandment
appeal remand
petition a remand, appeal against a return to custody
detention on remand
prolongation of custody or detention
extend remand
continue custody
extension of remand
lengthening of detention, prolongation of imprisonment
remanded
Simple past and past participle of to remand
remanding
Present participle of to remand
remands
Third-person singular simple present of to remand
remand

    Hyphenation

    re·mand

    Turkish pronunciation

    rîmänd

    Pronunciation

    /rəˈmand/ /rɪˈmænd/

    Etymology

    [ ri-'mand ] (transitive verb.) 15th century. Remand is a legal term which has two related but distinct usages. Its etymology is from the Latin re- and mandare, literally "to order." It evolved in Late Latin to remandare, or "to send back word." It appears in Middle French as remander and in Middle English as remaunden, both with essentially the same meaning, "to send back."
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